Are Statues Really Our Biggest Problem in America?

It is the final weeks of summer in 2017, and the racial tensions have flared up anew. This time in Charlottesville, Virginia where nineteen people are injured and hospitalized, and one has died: 32-year-old Heather Heyer.

Here is how one journalist describes what led up the tragedy, “This spring Charlottesville’s ultra-liberal city council voted to remove an equestrian statue of General Robert E. Lee that’s been standing in a park in downtown Charlottesville since 1924 and to change the park’s name from Lee Park to Emancipation Park.”[1] Historian Arthur Herman

“This town has grown from its sometimes great but often difficult history and is marching toward an inclusive future,” DMB writes of “hometown.”

Moments later, the crowd hears a loud, sharp thud. People start screaming and running north, up 3rd and 4th streets to Main Street, a seven-block pedestrian-only stretch of restaurants, shops, and bars. On a typical summer Saturday, this historic Virginia city would be teeming with families and tourists, but today it is filled with police officers in riot gear, who form grim lines to block pedestrians’ access to various points along the mall.’”[2]

As enticing as it is to plunge in and demand that we tear down all offensive statues and mistakenly believe that will start to heal our land. I want you to think deeper than what is only at best a surface and band-aid solution. Something lies beneath the surface that no matter how we try and bury it keeps resurrecting itself.

The Issue with Statues.

The psalmists give us an unambiguous warning about the nature of images.

Their idols are silver and gold,

the work of human hands.

They have mouths, but do not speak;

eyes, but do not see.

They have ears, but do not hear;

noses, but do not smell.

They have hands, but do not feel;

feet, but do not walk;

and they do not make a sound in their throat.

Those who make them become like them;

so do all who trust in them. (Ps 115:4–8)

Here I will risk people reigning down fury on me. Because people will fire back that, “We are not worshipping these statues.” Before you attack this point, we should identify and define idolatry. Idolatry is any “Man-made images or representations worshiped as deities; any natural or manufactured objects worshiped as a deity; anything receiving worship other than the one true God.” – Carl E. DeVries. We tend to think of idols as tiny god-like figures that we bow down to and offer our worship and praise. However, it is any object that we place above the one true God. In the time of Isaiah, the prophet, he described idols made in human form (Is 40:19, 20; 44:9–17).

The carpenter stretches a line; he marks it out with a pencil. He shapes it with planes and marks it with a compass. He shapes it into the figure of a man, with the beauty of a man, to dwell in a house. Isaiah 44:13

I lay all this out to ask us to take a step back and examine the passion we are putting into this debate. It is not about the statues, nor about the history, we are trying to preserve. The deeper under the surface issue is what Satan is doing to our democracy.

As the racial tensions escalate, it is fitting for us to address the heart of the conflict. Who is the enemy we are fighting? On the surface, it appears that we are fighting against people who have an issue people of different skin color or nationality. But are we fighting people with radical beliefs and an ideology that is outside of mainstream America? You would not believe how many people I have had to unfriend on Facebook because of the toxic political posts. The solution to healing racial divisions is not as simple as spending more time in authentic, vulnerable, and transparent conversations? The solution to acknowledge and realize we are in the middle of spiritual warfare. We are fighting Satan and his minions for the soul of America. We are not blacks people, white people, Hispanics, and Latino people, nor Asians people, first. No, first we are humans, created by the same Almighty God and labeled by that same God, as good when we were created. Unfortunately, sin has distorted that once perfect creation, but sin changed it for all humanity equally. The enemy who lurks in the darkness who have you believe somehow that your sinful life is not as bad as your neighbors.

Read the words of Paul in Romans 3, “What then? Are we Jews any better off? No, not at all. For we have already charged that all, both Jews and Greeks, are under sin, as it is written:

“None is righteous, no, not one;

no one understands;

no one seeks for God.

All have turned aside; together they have become worthless;

no one does good,

not even one.”

“Their throat is an open grave;

they use their tongues to deceive.”

“The venom of asps is under their lips.”

“Their mouth is full of curses and bitterness.”

“Their feet are swift to shed blood;

in their paths are ruin and misery,

and the way of peace they have not known.”

“There is no fear of God before their eyes.” Romans 3:9–18

As the young people might say so don’t get this twisted, we all stand before God the same way. We appear before Him broken, flawed, sinners, all in need of forgiveness of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. As much as share the same fallen condition, we also share the same redemption. To fight what is ripping our country apart point to the real enemy, Satan. Call him out in public, in your churches, on your social media pages, in print don’t let his devious actions go about unrecognized because that is where he has the greatest influence. We have the weapons to win this fight in our country; the power is found in God’s Word and putting on the full armor of God.

I just had this conversation with family members in Virginia. (me in PA). I grew up hearing the “idolization” of these “heroes”. “In God’s eyes, the fight is not about statues, it is about the condition of the heart. We all have to stand in front of our Maker and answer for the decisions we make and explain why we chose to do the things we do….” me to family. I stand with My Savior. Thank you Keith!

“I lay all this out to ask us to take a step back and examine the passion we are putting into this debate…The solution to healing racial divisions is not as simple as spending more time in authentic, vulnerable, and transparent conversations? The solution to acknowledge and realize we are in the middle of spiritual warfare. We are fighting Satan and his minions for the soul of America. We are not blacks people, white people, Hispanics, and Latino people, nor Asians people, first. No, first we are humans, created by the same Almighty God and labeled by that same God, as good when we were created. ”

Thankful for this much needed reminder. Let’s rally in prayer for this country…

Reblogged this on praise2worshipdotnet and commented:
In Jesus’ time people of all kinds came running with the sick for Him to touch. We can do the same when we cry for His mercy and help. O God heal our land!

Holy Greetings to you through mighty name of our Lord Jesus Christ and by the Christ Love and Global Hope Ministry here..
Especially now I am reporting to you about my tribal area ministry which I have done recently. I went to under developed and inhospitable area in East Godavari District forest villages and visited them tribal people through love of the Christ and in His Hope and stayed there two days this month of August 22, 24,2017. I took my assistant trainee pastor and visited many house to house and covered 5 villages. We distributing gospel tracts and prayed at the door of ever houses that visited. They are so happy and provided us accommodation and also food. They asked my visits to them once in every month. I promised to them as many seemed to accept the faith of Jesus God and hearing carefully word of God and attending prayers and prayed and worshipping with us. At time I am very joy in the God with them people in night.
The standard of lives of those people were utterly poor and they live in cloistered, exclusive, remote and inhospitable area such as hill and forest. They are very backwardness and their livelihood is based on primitive agriculture, a low value closed economy with a low level of technology that leads to their proverty. They have low levels of literacy and health. They do daily labour farm works. Some times when then is no call of works, they do food for works scheme of government and live by hard work and live in huts without proper clothing and also medical.
I would like to serve the word and save them for our God Jesus. But I can only work hard and serve. So kindly pray to God for his direction and how to going to spreading the word of God Jesus to them people and tribal people.
In His Love and Kindness
Yours brother
madhu